Changing velocity and constant acceleration? Yes.
Changing velocity indicates constant acceleration dv/dt = a constant(k) when v=kt.
Then dv/dt= dkt/dt= k. the constant k can be positive , negative or zero.
A body moving with constant speed in a circular path has acceleration changing at every point.
Changing at a constant rate equal to acceleration.
If body is moving in a circle with uniform or constant speed its acceleration will be uniform as velocity i.e. to say direction is changing at every point.
This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.This object is changing its position, its velocity, and its acceleration.
Yes, it's direction may be constantly changing which would mean it is still accelerating.
A body moving with constant speed in a circular path has acceleration changing at every point.
Yes. If a body has a constant velocity there is no acceleration, but if the velocity is changing there is acceleration present.
Changing at a constant rate equal to acceleration.
Yes. 'Acceleration' means either speed or direction is changing. If direction is changing,then there is acceleration, even if speed is constant.
Unless the train is in a curve, you cannot have constant speed and constant acceleration. You either have constant speed and zero acceleration, or you have changing speed and constant acceleration. Please restate the question.
No it cannot. It is either one or the other. For constant velocity, acceleration must be 0, meaning there is no acceleration happening here. If there is constant acceleration, then the velocity is constantly changing.
Acceleration is the rate of change in velocity. When velocity is constant, it is NOT CHANGING so acceleration is negligible or ZERO or non-existent.
It is constant in magnitude. It is changing in direction.
Unless the object is changing its direction, it is not accelerating. Constant velocity implies that speed and direction are constant, and for acceleration to occur, either speed, direction, or both values must be changing.
"Constant" means that regardless of when you measure it, the result is always the same. "Velocity" means speed and its direction. "Acceleration" means the rate at which speed is changing, and the direction in which it's changing.
Acceleration by definition is a change in speed, direction, or both. If the speed is constant, the direction could still be changing. You can feel a change in direction, therefore you can feel acceleration even if the speed is constant.
No. The velocity and acceleration are not zero because the direction is changing, thus the velocity and acceleration is changing.